Search Details

Word: heraldings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...Barbirolli earned better marks, and easily passed his New York entrance examination with a suave Mozart symphony and a heroic Brahms Fourth, wherein New York Times Critic Olin Downes discovered "virility, grip, lyrical opulence, and on occasion the impact of the bear's paw." Said the New York Herald Tribune's, Lawrence Oilman: "He has disclosed himself as a musician of taste and fire and intensity, electric, vital, sensitive, dynamic, experienced; as an artist who knows his way among the scores he elects to set before us, who has mastered not only his temperament but his trade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MUSIC: Philharmonic Freshman | 11/16/1936 | See Source »

...FEAR CAME-John T. Whitaker- Macmillan ($2.50). Troubled volume by a foreign correspondent of the New York Herald Tribune, whose reluctant disillusionment with the League of Nations was crystallized as an eyewitness of Mussolini's Ethiopian campaign...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fiction: Recent Books: Nov. 16, 1936 | 11/16/1936 | See Source »

...gained, Dear F. P. A. at College! LEWIS PERRY, JR. F. P. A.'s "The Conning Tower" The Herald-Tribune...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESS | 11/10/1936 | See Source »

...Simpson was a picture of "queenly composure" to Hearst Correspondent Thomas Watson. The New York Herald Tribune's Jack Beall emphasized her "spasms of coughing." The New York Times's, W. F. Leysmith cabled: "Frequently her tongue moved rapidly in nervous movements from cheek to cheek. She looked to one seeing her for the first time like a middle-aged woman of the upper classes. She has a wen on the right side of her chin. She told a most ordinary story...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Stag at Bay | 11/9/1936 | See Source »

During the week U. S. columnists for the first time seriously took up the matter. Newspundit Walter Lippmann of the New York Herald Tribune applauded the fact that nowhere in the British Isles had any newspaper or magazine yet coupled the names of the King and Mrs. Simpson, or the facts of their friendship and her divorce. This had been done only by a mimeographed London weekly tipsheet, The Week, of negligible circulation. Pontificated Pundit Lippmann: "The reticence of the British press cannot be put down to an effort of the King to suppress knowledge of his regard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Queen Wallis' | 11/9/1936 | See Source »

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